You have to accept that you're going to be a different person than a different language. Once you do that, then you start learning a lot quicker and everything becomes amazing. Even if you feel different when you're speaking English, it's still you. It's just a different aspect of you. Don't be afraid to fail. That's a big one. Learn from failure. Oh, mate. So I'm learning a lot from this episode. Let's put it that way. Yeah. Okay, I'm going to stop doing that noise. All right. I've stopped doing it now. Sorry for interrupting your foot. And in terms of language, well, it's obvious
This episode features a conversation with my friend Paul Taylor, who you already know from previous episodes of LEP. Paul is back from the Edinburgh fringe, where he was performing for the whole of August in a comedy show, and a couple of days ago he came over to the flat for a cup of tea and a bit of a chat. We started talking about the Edinburgh fringe and how it went for him. It was his first time and I think he found it very challenging because the audiences were hard to please, apparently they had some tough shows where nobody laughed, and he realised that the standard of stand-up comedy in the UK is much higher than he expected, but it was a learning experience. Then we ended up talking about the similarity between learning how to do stand-up comedy and learning a language. During the conversation I quickly decided to record our thoughts so that I could make it into an episode of my podcast. We wrote down a few brief ideas and then went upstairs to start recording. You can now listen to that conversation here in full. Also, listen to the end to hear some funny out-takes from this episode.
http://wp.me/p4IuUx-53R #language #learning #english #comedy #Edinburgh #fringe
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